An article
written for the first Hong Hong HiFi Show, 1993
Translated and published in Chinese
by Arthur M. Noxon, PE, MSME, Physicist
The Chain
is as Strong as Its Weakest Link
The electronic components and interconnects
available in today's hi end audio are superb. Yet there is always
room for improvement and changes in both the technology and style
of audio. Playback audio will continue to be improved in every detail
but if the minute improvements are not perceptible, they will not
be heard and appreciated. New equipment that presents no audible
difference from older equipment will not sell so easily and without
good sales, further product development cannot be supported. The
evolution of the product line slows to a halt and sales become driven
by marketing hype, not performance.
The Listening Room
If a technical improvement is real it should
be audible, but if it cannot be heard it becomes useless, or at
best a curiosity. As long as an improvement is within the realm
of human perception, it can be heard except for only one factor
- the noise floor. Whenever improvements are buried in the noise
floor of a system they cannot be heard. Only when the noise floor
is lowered can the hidden, inner detail become revealed.
The electronic "hiss" noise floor
had been a problem in audio for many years. More recent improvements
in signal processing have driven the electronic noise floor down
to almost the threshold of hearing. The noise floor now is more
mechanical - transport decks, air conditioning and outside noise
intrusion. But there is one less obvious noise floor and it is currently
the single most significant sound barrier to better listening. It
is the self noise of the listening room acoustic. Lingering sounds
from one musical moment become the masking noise floor for the next
musical moment. The chain is as strong as its weakest link and for
today's audio, the weakest link is the listening room acoustic.
There are two phases of listening room acoustics
and both must be understood and properly handled in order to reduce
the room acoustic noise floor. We begin by recalling the piano keyboard.
It is divided in half with notes belonging to the bass cleft to
the left and the treble cleft at the right. For all practical purposes,
it is sufficient to divide the room acoustic noise floor into these
same two regions, bass arid treble.
When most people envision sound, they think
of how the sound in the treble cleft behaves. It bounces around
the room as if it were a ball and that is something with which we
all some experience. It is because we are familiar with bouncing
balls that we have an intuitive feeling for sound in the treble
cleft. The bass cleft is quite different. With bass, sound doesn't
beam forward and bounce around, bass goes in all directions equally
- as easily backwards as forwards. Place a speaker outside, in the
yard and play it while you stand behind it. What do you hear? Bass
without treble. Despite this most obvious fact, the behavior of
bass continues to elude people. Most of us do not have experiences
that lead us to an intuitive understanding for sound in the bass
range.
Old Wives' Tales
The first idea the hifi person usually has
about bass these days is the idea of room modes or room resonances.
There have been articles about this in the press. The basic expectation
is if the room has the correct ratio it will sound great. Another
popular idea is to build a room that has no parallel walls, even
the ceiling could be at an angle. This is supposed to eliminate
standing waves. Another often heard notion is that of killing resonance
by adding bass traps or an equalizer. Amazingly, all of these too
common ideas about bass and rooms are simply incorrect. Not one
thing about these notions is true, but the people are not at fault.
They have been taught these ideas by the sci fi writers of the hifi
press whose imagination exceeds their training or experience in
acoustics.
The search for the perfect room dimension
is a very old one and it is based on the good idea of evenly distributing
the resonances. This means each room resonance is as evenly spaced
away from adjacent resonant frequencies as possible. Originally
this concept belonged to the art of building reverberation chambers.
Reverb chambers are used to test acoustic properties of materials
and they need to have evenly spaced resonances to give good results.
Reverb chambers have their speaker located in one of the tri-corners
(floor/wall/wall) and the microphone in the opposite tri-corner
(ceiling/wall/wall). Every room mode can be stimulated by the speaker
in the tri-corner and the mic will hear every mode loudly. This
very unique property only belongs to the corners of the rooms.
There are certain room ratios that give evenly
distributed resonant frequencies. However, the hifi listening room
is not an acoustic test chamber. Hifi speakers are almost never
sitting in a corner except for Klipsch and the listeners are surely
never sitting in a tri-corners of the room. In a hifi room the speaker
is located away from the corner and from there it cannot stimulate
all the room resonances. Which room resonances are stimulated depends
on where the speaker is located in the room. Only modes stimulated
by the speaker need to be well spaced apart. There is absolutely
zero guarantee that a room with reverb chamber quality well spaced
modes will also have well spaced modes when the speaker is moved
out of the comer.
The non-parallel wall is another magic carpet
concept in audio. It is true that non-parallel walls keep the flutter
echo down but that is a treble effect. Sound is energy. Put this
energy into a room and it stays there until one of two things happen.
Sound can be absorbed by bass traps and wall friction or it can
be leaked out of the room. Sound energy is stored in the room in
either of two forms, organized or disorganized. Disorganized sound
dies out faster in rooms than does organized sound. Organized storage
of acoustic energy is a room resonance. Because the room resonance
is so efficiently stored, it is the sound in the room we mostly
hear. It causes "room boom" and we wish it would go away.
No matter what shape the room has, the room still has room resonances.
If a room has walls it has resonances. The only effect the shape
of a room has on resonance is which frequency it is and how the
resonance is laid out in the room. Resonance is not eliminated by
changing the angle of walls.
An equalizer is irrelevant to room resonances.
What is more is that they are almost never used in high end audio.
A parametric equalizer changes the loudness of sound at a specific
frequency. If a room resonance is "equalized", then what
used to sound loud now sounds normal but the room is physically
the same. The long decay of the resonance still fills the room -
it is just not as loud.
Bass Traps actually improve bass in rooms.
Designer built, pro sound recording studios have the bass traps
usually built into the walls and they are not usually visible. Only
in hifi and the smaller project or midi studios are bass traps being
set up in front of the existing walls and corners of the room. Here,
bass traps have become quite visible. Regardless of their location,
bass traps can never "kill" room resonances. Properly
designed bass traps do not weaken bass in the room. They actually
increase the bass power delivered to the listener. Bass traps do
not effect the direct wave from the speaker. They do reduce the
strength of the room resonances that interfere with the direct wave.
Bass traps reduce the sound of the room and let you hear more of
the sound from the speaker.
Rooms have resonances because rooms have
walls, floor and a ceiling. This is a fact of nature. Bass traps
do change the sharpness or "Q" of the room resonance,
no different than adding resistance to a resonant electrical circuit.
No matter what the resonance, there will always be an intense sound
pressure in the corners of the room. That is why pressure zone bass
traps loaded into the corners of the room are so effective. By converfing
1% of your listening room volume into highly efficient corner loaded
bass traps, an amazing conversion, a stability in the room acoustic
sets in. Bass trap all four vertical corners and the ceiling perimeter
comer with a soffit bass trap. This is the best way to control the
behavior of bass in the room and causes as little visual impact
as possible.
Dimensions and Floorplans
Rooms are being built exclusively for listening
and home theatre more often in recent years. People always ask what
are the best dimensions. It is better if the room is designed to
fit the sound system, letting the dimensions fall naturally into
place. Speakers are usually 7 to 8 feet apart and the listeners
in biff like to be 8 to 12 feet away from the speakers. Speakers
should be about 3 to 4 feet off the sidewalls and 4 to 6 feet off
the front wall. The listener is best located 3 to 5 feet off the
back wall. This puts room dimensions to be 13 to 16 feet wide and
15 to 23 feet long. If ratios are desired, any combination of 7,
9 and 13 works well, such as 7 to 9 or 7 to 13 or 9 to 13. Standard
cone drivers should never be located 25% of the width away from
the side walls. The better dimension is 29 to 32% of the width from
the side walls. The distance from the cone to the rear wall is best
set within 10% at 1.4 or 2.4 times the distance from the cone to
the side wall.
With dipoles and towers there is a strong
need for a good length/width ratio and less of an issue exists about
the height ratio of the room. Tall speakers stimulate strongly the
front to back and side to side modes of the room, but not too much
in the vertical direction because the speaker drivers line up most
of the room's vertical height. If ratios are preferred only the
width/height ratio is important. The speakers create ringing in
the front of the room, "head end ringing". The 13/7 ratio
is usually best for height but the other ratios can be used. Room
height can vary between 7 feet and 9 feet but heights over 10 feet
should be avoided except with tall towers.
The higher the ceiling, the lower the floor
to ceiling resonant frequency. An 11 or 12 foot ceiling has a fundamental
resonance of about 50 Hz and is easily stimulated because most bass
drivers and especially subwoofers are located near the floor. Probably
the worst ceiling to use is a peak or vaulted ceiling. The peaks
reach substantial heights and their megaphone effect is not fun
to listen to. If angled ceilings are used, they should be low over
the speakers and open up behind the listener.
Another listening room floor plan is coming
into vogue. It is the short, wide room. These rooms can be 15 or
16 feet deep and 24 or more feet wide and the listener is against
the back wall. The room is so wide the bass build up at the back
wall is not as bad as one would expect. The two wings become ambience
storage chambers and the sound has a strong image presence with
a strong lateral ambience. This, like all listening rooms, needs
1% volume dedicated to bass traps. The width/depth ratio of 3/1
must be avoided by 15%. The speaker separation must be 15% more
or less than 1/3 the width and definitely not 50% of the width.
Another listening room arrangement that some
people try to work with is to set the axis of the system down a
diagonal of a square room. Huge bass traps are needed in the corner
between the speakers and the corner behind the listener. The walls
behind the listener should be pretty absorptive to keep imaging
clear. This room can be frustrating to set up but it seems to have
some ambience and stage depth properties that keep people trying
to make it work.
When dedicated rooms for hifi are not available
then a portion of the house is used for playback. The first rule
for set up, above all others is acoustic symmetry. Without acoustic
symmetry the imaging and fidelity will be highly distorted. Probably
the most common asymmetric room is an "L" shaped listening
room. One speaker has its back to the corner and the other speaker
is against the wall in the center of the room. The corner loaded
speaker requires heavy use of bass traps to balance out the bottom
end so both speakers begin to sound the same. Sometimes furniture
can be rearranged to create reflections that mimic the presence
of a wall for the speaker that is out in the open. A cabinet can
be moved in against the back wall, just to the outside of the speaker
to simulate a wall corner. A cleverly positioned lamp shade can
reflect the treble. Work to get symmetry in the acoustic space.
Absolutely the worst bass performance occurs
when there is a room next to the speakers and the doorway is open.
This coupled resonant cavity puts such a "double kick"
on the bass transients it is nearly unlistenable. Close the room
up or at least put heavy drapery to lower the strength of the report
from the coupled cavity. Opening doors to adjacent rooms behind
the listener can add to low frequency ambience which can be desirable.
Construction
When building or remodeling a listening room,
the walls, floor and ceiling materials become particularly important.
Today's audio gear is powerful and can deliver real punches to the
surfaces of the room. Although acoustic pressure maybe quite small
in a mechanical sense, when spread out over the surface of a wall,
real force can be developed. At the very least the head end (speaker
end) of the room needs to be mechanically inert. That means when
you thump the walls or ceiling with the heel of your fist, not much
happens. Concrete is inert but many homes are built out of lighter
weight materials such as wood studs and sheet rock. The wood stud
acts like a spring and the sheet rock acts like a weight connected
to the spring. The result is "wall/stud resonance", a
sympathetic resonance of the walls at about 70 Hz. This drumhead
effect can drive anybody in audio completely mad. Ceiling hop occurs
at lower frequencies for the same reasons. Good audio rooms will
have all surfaces mechanically inert.
The wall cavity can be filled with insulation.
It is always a good idea but doesn't help the wall/stud resonance.
Some people wish to pour sand into their walls to add mass and establish
a damping action inside the wall. The big problem with this is that
sand settles, gradually increasing pressure on the lower wall until
the sheetrock wall bulges, wedged apart by compacted sand. The best
method is to use constrained layer damping in the wall construction
while suspending the sheetrock off the studs. There is an item used
to increase the isolation between walls of apartments. It is a resilient
metal fir strip often called "Z-metal" "RC-1".
This is installed onto the studs then the sheetrock is screwed to
the it. The result is that the spring of the studs become disconnected
from the mass of the wall. Now there is no spring/mass to vibrate
and the 70 Hz wall boom problem is gone.
However, a new problem will have developed.
We now have a large freely suspended sheet of gypsum board, a wall
that can make quite a sound of its own. If visco damping material
is applied between the Z-metal and the sheetrock, damping of the
wall panel will occur. The next improvement is add a second layer
of sheetrock with visco elastic material sandwiched between the
layers. The wall really becomes inert. The ceiling can be treated
exactly the same way. An alternative to the thin 1/16" thick
double sided adhesive visco-elastic sheet, would be to 100% glue
both sides a layer of sound board (firtex or celotex) between the
two layers of sheetrock. Constrained layer damping means extra labor
and cost but the unmuddled sound in the room is well worth the extra
effort.
Once the surface of the room has been rendered
inert and the strip type corner loaded bass traps have been installed
in the four vertical corners and the ceiling perimeter corners,
the listening room is ready for occupancy and detailing. It is also
at this point that a number of regrets become realized. The size
and placement of windows and doors can cause untold grief if they
were planned by the architectural standards that apply to residential
rooms and not hi end audio playback rooms.
Doors should be located on the side walls
and definitely nowhere near the speakers because they rattle. Locate
doors behind the listener but not flush to the corner. At least
2 feet of solid corner wall should always be maintained. A door
on the back wall is a lessor choice due to the intense bass pressures
on the back wall. The back wall door should not be located in the
center or in either corner. It should begin about 2 feet from a
corner. One of the best set ups possible is to have open french
doors or archway directly behind the listener. This is a classic
set up. It eliminates problems and adds benefits. Adjust heavy drapery
for best effects.
Windows are another item that commonly occupy
a position in a room. Large windows are to be avoided, they are
too tympanic. Tall, narrow windows are the choice. Use laminated
glass, the type used for glass shelving in stores. Windows are best
located behind the speakers on the side walls but not close to the
corners. They can also be located to either side of the listener,
preferably slightly behind the listener, but slightly in front of
the listener is okay too. One of the biggest mistakes is thinking
a thermal window is good for acoustics - it isn't. It's terrible.
The glass is very thin and the air space is negligibly small for
acoustic purposes. Standard sliding glass doors are never to be
used in the hi end room as they resound with tympanic thunder.
Windows allow distracting outside noise into
the room as well as let sound leak out. To minimize sound transmission
problems, use a double window. The two sheets of glass should be
separated at least by 4 inches of air space. The glass sheets ought
to be of different thickness. The space between the glass is to
be vented into the wall cavity. Frame work and trim molding need
to be sealed with expandable foam and acoustical caulking. Set all
glass into a bed of visco-elastic damping material.
Equipment
Speakers don't play by themselves, they require
equipment to drive them. Power amps are best left near the speakers
with short connecting cables. The preamp and all other equipment
is best positioned slightly behind the listener, against the wall.
Some people are building equipment closets, much like the equipment
rooms of recording studios. A glass door and remote control work
well together.
There is a tradition in mid fi that tends
to creep into the hi end. The electronics are piled into a custom
built wood and glass equipment cabinets centrally located on the
wall, directly behind the speakers. All cabinets, or shelving in
hi end audio must be acoustically porous, not reflecting. Any kind
of cabinetry or equipment stacked up between the speakers locates
it directly in the middle of the sound stage. The last thing any
of us really want is their sound stage filled up with sound reflecting
equipment, blinking lights, and hollow resonant boxes. The sound
stage needs to be absolutely free from visual or acoustic distraction.
It needs to be an acoustically quiet backdrop upon which sub fie
images play out their action.
Lighting in the playback room needs to be
versatile. Bright lights are needed during set up, adjustments or
upgrade installs. But for playback and imaging, it is best if there
are no strong visual distractions in the front of the room. We want
our eyes to be relaxed, wide open but without anything to catch
our visual attention. Visual activity competes with acoustic imaging.
It is best if the front of the room appears to be nothing more than
vague visual shadows in a dim grey fog.
The lights for playback are best located
behind the listener and they should be diffuse. Hollow can lighting
is attractive but they make a lot of noise. You will hear them in
a good room. You can also hear singing metal waste paperbaskets
in a rood room, (use wicker). Best light has a ceiling bezel and
lens of thick slightly rounded glass. A dimmer is appropriate but
many of the electronic dimmers create a buzz of the filaments when
dimmed down and we prefer to avoid introducing noise into a playback
room. A variable transformer voltage control for lights does not
produce noise. Low voltage lighting should be considered. There
may be electronic dimmers that are quiet but be sure to test them
before installing them.
Reflections
Wall reflections and ceiling reflections
obscure imaging detail, stage depth, smooth lateral positioning
and musical accuracy. This is because the early, first few reflections
are still strong and arrive within the sound fusion time period.
Our listening process correlates all the early reflections that
arrive within 20 milliseconds of the direct signal. What we think
we hear is really the sum of the direct and early reflected signals.
This is primarily a treble range effect. The single worst reflection
is the crosstalk reflection. This occurs for example when the left
speaker plays off the right wall and we hear the reflection in our
right ear. Just after our right ear had received a signal from the
right speaker it is fed another signal from the left speaker. The
result is essentially the loss of stereo and we recognize it because
of the "hole in the middle" soundstage. If there is but
only one reflection to control, it is the crosstalk reflection.
Placing absorption at the reflection point
will reduce the problem of reflections. The question becomes, where
is the reflection point? The crosstalk reflection is on either side
wall, at ear level and located about 1 1/2 feet behind, towards
the listener from the halfway point between the speaker and the
listener.
A very accurate and easy method to locate
the reflection point does exist. It is an optical alignment technique
known as "ray tracing" and it is learned by all students
of acoustics. Tape up a strip of mylar reflecting plastic sheet
on the wall or have someone hold a mirror fiat against the wall.
Use a strong, narrow beam flashlight and hold it near your head
and shine the light on the mirror. Observe where the light lands.
Adjust the mirror and light beam until the light lands on the midrange
speakers and tweeters. Mark the spot on the wall where the reflection
occurs because that is where your wall acoustic treatment will be
placed.
The wall absorption should be effective at
least through 200 Hz in order to cover the treble cleft. There is
one problem with simple, commodity type absorption. They usually
do not absorb in the lower treble octave and even worse these office
panels, which are fabric covered noise control panels or blocks
of corrugated foam, leave a "black hole" in your acoustic
periphery. This is very distracting for those of us who worked hard
to develop a sensitivity for sound and imaging. Wall absorbers do
need to absorb the early reflection but they can also be fit with
reflectors. Sound that bounces off the rear wall, behind the listener
will graze back up the side walls, impact the reflectors and backscatter
towards the listener.
The best of both worlds is now attained.
Early reflection absorption is followed by time delayed, low level
ambient reflections and all from the same spot on the wall. This
technique of using time delayed backscatter sound absorption produces
the very desirable effect of lateral ambience recovery. It is used
in properly designed recording studios and it can also be set up
at home. The important feature in hi end sound absorbers is the
presence of some sort of reflective quality. It may seem like a
contradiction of terms but it is really a matter of refined taste.
There is another reflection in the room that
is particularly hard on the listener. It is the rear wall bounce.
Sound passes by the listener only to hit the rear wall and bounce
back past the listener again. If the positive phase of a sound wave
is bounding back just when the negative phase of the wave passes
the listener - they cancel. This occurs when the round trip distance
between the listener and the back wall equals 1/2 wavelength. For
example, sitting 4 feet from the wall means cancellation occurs
for a 16 foot wavelength, a 70 Hz frequency. This is not a room
resonant problem. The low frequency "cold spot" depends
only on the distance the listener is from the rear wall. Bass traps
behind the listener against the wall must be used to control this
problem. Remember, treble range reflectors across the face of any
bass trap keeps the ambience from feeling dead. The goal in hi end
acoustics is of course acoustic control, but control done in such
a tasteful way that you can never hear where the control comes from.
The Last Link
By following the above details, the perfect
room will still not be realized but the room you have will be so
good that you will be very happy with it for a long time. You will
recognize it is a good room because the speakers will seem to completely
disappear. They become silent projectors of an acoustic holograph
that appears in the front of your room.
Just remember, acoustic modifications, detailing
and upgrades are every bit a part of today's hi end audio system
as the speaker. Modern hi end audio electronics are of such quality
that the room acoustic simply has to be improved in order to even
begin to hear the hi end part of hi end audio. The audio chain can
be only as strong as its weakest link, which for now is the playback
listening room.